Well, since qualia has no meaning, I'll have to agree that it cannot have a special meaning... — Banno
I don't know how one knows one is willing to revise a belief. Or, perhaps better put, I think people's self-evaluations on such an issue are radically biased. — Coben
Qualia seem to meet the three criteria set out for a technical term. — Banno
No, that’s something completely different. Basic beliefs are the kinds of things one would use as premises in an argument. The validity of logical inference itself is not something you ever need to put in a premise of an argument, because if you did you would just get an infinite regress: “if P then Q, and P, therefore Q” would have to become “if P then Q, P, and if ‘if P then Q’ and P then Q, therefore Q”, ad infinitum. — Pfhorrest
And other people’s explicit advocacy of methods to the contrary, as I already said. — Pfhorrest
some kinds of beliefs can only be held on fideistic grounds, like if you believe in the kind of God that cannot possibly be detected observationally. So if someone believes in that kind of thing, you know they’re believing it fideistically. — Pfhorrest
My hypothesis is that they arrive at these kinds of unassailable but useless beliefs after they’re challenged in arguments and modify their old beliefs however necessary to avoid “losing”, even if it requires methodologically “cheating”. — Pfhorrest
Besides just not posting, or that one huge 80k-word post, or maybe quarantining all my posts in one General Forrest Thread (should all users be quarantined to one thread like that? Lots of people start lots of threads wherein they repeatedly touch on the same theme; anything by schopenhauer1 is probably anti-natalist for instance), I just don’t know what you want from me. — Pfhorrest
Go ahead and believe something, for any reason or no reason, it doesn’t matter. (This is the “liberal” plank of my system, contra “cynicism”).
When you experience something contrary to what you believed you would experience, change your beliefs, exactly how and why doesn’t matter. (This is the “critical” plank of my system, contra “fideism”).
Repeat forever and you’ll get less and less wrong over time. — Pfhorrest
On my account, epistemic validity just requires that you believe something or other regardless of how little you have to go on, and that you remain willing to change anything you believe when you encounter evidence to the contrary. — Pfhorrest
If the word "qualia" has no use, then what are we talking about? What is Dennett talking about? — Luke
Perhaps our conscious minds "don't work in real time", but why do our brains not work in real time? — Luke
That is exactly what I mean by fideism. If you think any beliefs are basic and immutable, not subject to question, then that's fideistic. — Pfhorrest
Primarily the latter — Pfhorrest
I think that those basic implicit premises of every argument should be treated as correct, because either “I’m just right and you’re just wrong” (supposing that some answers are unquestionable) or “there’s not really any such thing as right or wrong” (supposing that some questions are unanswerable) are lazy ways to dodge the argument, avoiding the potential of having to change one’s opinions, and so cutting one off from all potential to learn, to improve one’s opinions.
All the rest of my philosophy stems from rejecting those two cop-outs and running with whatever's left. — Pfhorrest
are you claiming there's some objective algorithmic method of determining parsimony — Isaac
Yes, and that is the topic of the next thread I have written up already. — Pfhorrest
a first reading of C — Isaac
This is every bit as subjective judgement as my use of "obvious" for the same purpose earlier. I think you and I, who seem to have similar on-the-ground beliefs despite our philosophical differences, would likely see the same reading as "obvious" / "first", but if "obvious" is too subjective then so is "first reading". — Pfhorrest
We can take an educated guess at whether they're holding B like that or not, though, based on how un-parsimonious a system of beliefs they're willing to construct to excuse the preservation of B. — Pfhorrest
If they're doing all kinds of twisty mental gymnastics full of exceptions upon exceptions to preserve B when it would be much easier to just reject B and leave everything else simple and elegant, that suggests -- though doesn't prove conclusively -- that they're likely unwilling to question B. — Pfhorrest
Actually, that phrase: "something it is like to..." is what does violence to the language. It's a recent invention found almost only in philosophical discourse, and so is inherently fraught. — Banno
Why is it only possible under the second model of experience (sensory input->qualia.....then....b)qualia->(via some judgement/assessment)->response)? Are you saying that an intersubjective comparison of qualia would be possible under the first model of experience (sensory input-> response)? — Luke
What use are they for what? Qualia are "the way things seem to us". Why do they need to have a use? — Luke
Aren't you just expressing the hard problem with that question: why do we have qualia if they make no functional difference? — Luke
Can "the way things seem to us" be theoretical? — Luke
Anyway, pumps 7-12 is where most of the "demolition" occurs? — Luke
Intution pumps 8-12 look like we don't have direct access to previous qualia such that we can answer the question, Just the memory of them. And memories are fallible reconstructions. My memory qualia of tasting the coffee years ago might not be the same as it was when tasting it then. But that doesn't mean there is no qualia when tasting it now. — Marchesk
There are plenty of people who tell us that they use (and advocate the use of) fideistic methodologies; basically all of "Reformed epistemology" is about that. — Pfhorrest
You always seem to forget that I consider all of the philosophy I'm advocating to be a shoring-up of common sense against badly done philosophy. — Pfhorrest
See the several preceding posts where I discuss parsimony as the rationale behind things like "unwieldy". — Pfhorrest
The rest of those quote snips are either explicitly describing someone else's subjective judgement, or speaking loosely in conversation (assuming that we have some common ground in our casual, on-the-ground opinions, that I can refer to, despite our disagreement on technical philosophical things) and not as part of explicitly defining my philosophical position. — Pfhorrest
unreasonable — Pfhorrest
plausible — Pfhorrest
obvious — Pfhorrest
unwieldy — Pfhorrest — Isaac
So why were you tempted to agree that science needed to modify our nervous system in order for us to know? — Marchesk
Or at least, that's what the abstracted third-party account tells us, according to Dennett's setup. — Marchesk
I should have added that science can't tell us that that bat necessarily has a sonar sensation, only whether it has recognizable neural structures (by comparison with ours). — Marchesk
I thought qualia were a property of perception, rather than a product of perception. If I perceive a blue door, the blue isn't something that follows from the perception, it's a part of it. — Luke
What sort of response do you mean? — Luke
Qualia are the resulting sensations that consciousness is made up of. — Marchesk
qualia is just the result of whatever neurological mechanisms are responsible, and it doesn't matter whether it's (a) or (b). — Marchesk
And that is what is radically private about consciousness that science cannot give us, without rewiring our nervous systems, or enhancing them. — Marchesk
maybe the qualia is just the result of whatever neurological mechanisms are responsible, and it doesn't matter whether it's (a) or (b). You end up with the same qualia. — Marchesk
That doesn’t mean we can’t discuss the merits of using different methods ourselves in the first person. Which is all I do in my arguments for my methodology: illustrate why doing things otherwise is more likely to lead you into or keep your in error than this way, so it’s in your interest, if you care about figuring out the truth, to do it this way. It’s not all about judging other people. — Pfhorrest
unreasonable — Pfhorrest
plausible — Pfhorrest
obvious — Pfhorrest
unwieldy — Pfhorrest
For those of us who have not fully accepted/understood this "banishment", where in the article did it occur with regard to privacy? — Luke
intuition pump #4: the Brainstorm machine...some neuroscientific apparatus that fits on your head and feeds your visual experience into my brain. With eyes closed I accurately report everything you are looking at.
Does this imply that if I wear the apparatus then I can experience another person's experience? No. Because I wouldn't be seeing (via my eyes) what another person sees via their eyes. That would be double transduction. — Luke
Amazingly (I find), the upshot of this intuition pump for Dennett is "that no intersubjective comparison of qualia is possible, even with perfect technology". This only supports privacy! Otherwise, intersubjective comparison would be possible. — Luke
While I might claim to be the only one who can know how my qualia seem to me, this does not imply that I am the only one who knows the causes of my qualia. The unconscious processes that cause qualia are irrelevant to the properties of one's conscious experience, especially privacy. — Luke
If there are qualia, they are even less accessible to our ken than we had thought. Not only are the classical intersubjective comparisons impossible (as the Brainstorm machine shows), but we cannot tell in our own cases whether our qualia have been inverted--at least not by introspection.
All the more support for privacy, then? None of this helps overcome the intuition of pump #3, that "our verbal behavior will match even if we experience entirely different subjective colors". — Luke
I find the rest of the intuition pumps, including the coffee tasters, are mostly about infallibility, which is not one of the four properties Dennett claims to be arguing against. — Luke
For those of us who have not fully accepted/understood this "banishment", where in the article did it occur with regard to privacy? — Luke
Algorithms don’t cause outputs. — khaled
It’s not tasting specifically that’s just an example. Dennett said that qualia cannot be a logical formulation, but must be an empirical fact to satisfy its defenders (your quote). But in the intuition pump designed to prove this (8) he did nothing to actually prove it. — khaled
But it’s worth noting that I don’t agree that it was ever intended to be used that way. So his “opposition” here is meaningless. — khaled
That's the trivial part, and not even part of his argument, Dennett says — Isaac
Then why did he spend the first 5/6 intuition pumps on it? — khaled
In section 2, I will use the first two intuition pumps to focus attention on the traditional notion. It will be the burden of the rest of the paper in to convince you that these two pumps, for all their effectiveness, mislead us and should be discarded. In section 3, the next four intuition pumps create and refine a "paradox" lurking in the tradition. This is not a formal paradox, but only a very powerful argument pitted against some almost irresistibly attractive ideas.
What do you mean? The purpose of the paper is clearly NOT to argue that this strong temptation exists. How is what you quoted a premise in his argument? “People usually respond with x” therefore what? — khaled
if absolutely nothing follows from this presumed knowledge--nothing, for instance, that would shed any light on the different psychological claims that might be true of Chase or Sanborn--what is the point of asserting that one has it?
You probably mean the bit about how no knowledge follows about the psychological states of the two. And to that I reply: So what? That doesn’t make the concept meaningless or useless. — khaled
No knowledge about what happens in your computer follows from knowledge of the algorithm of the program being run. — khaled
Just as the INTENT when talking about Qualia is NOT to explain what processes cause it. — khaled
Dennett proves that (again), we cannot tell if our experiences are changed due to a change in memory or due to a change in the actual Qualia. — khaled
Again, “No theory will be able to tell how Chase’s experience was changed” does NOT in any way disprove “That chase is tasting X is an empirical fact”. And once again, they’re not even related statements. To disprove the first he must find a situation where Chase literally cannot tell whether or not he is tasting coffee and no one else can tell either. — khaled
In any of the A-B-C scenarios we've been discussing, they hopefully will admit to A (not be explicitly logically inconsistent), and probably have some B that they hold immune to question, and so will resort to revising C. — Pfhorrest
Anyone who clings to some particular belief with unreasonable tenacity and will jump through whatever mental hoops necessary to excuse or dismiss any evidence that would otherwise apparently disprove it. — Pfhorrest
His description of the “properties of qualia” are not how people use them usually. — khaled
When people say qualia are private and accessible they mean that they are immediately apparent to them and only them. What he disproved was “I can tell exactly what goes wrong if I wake up one day and sugar tastes different”. That is not a contrapositive statement nor can I tell how it’s even related to the two properties he’s trying to disprove. — khaled
I think that everyone writing about qualia today would agree that there are all these possibilities for Chase and Sanborn.
There is a strong temptation, I have found, to respond to my claims in this paper more or less as follows: "But after all is said and done, there is still something I know in a special way: I know how it is with me right now." But if absolutely nothing follows from this presumed knowledge--nothing, for instance, that would shed any light on the different psychological claims that might be true of Chase or Sanborn--what is the point of asserting that one has it? Perhaps people just want to reaffirm their sense of proprietorship over their own conscious states.
Logical constructs out of judgments must be viewed as akin to theorists' fictions, and the friends of qualia want the existence of a particular quale in any particular case to be an empirical fact in good standing, not a theorist's useful interpretive fiction, else it will not loom as a challenge to functionalism or materialism or third-person, objective science.
Adding a belief to your set of beliefs is changing that set of beliefs, and as above, if you're epistemically compelled to make that change, that's the same thing as that set of beliefs being falsified. — Pfhorrest
's just the negation of fideism, where that in turn is the claim that some beliefs are beyond question, beyond refutation, unable to possibly be shown false or incorrect or wrong. — Pfhorrest
It seems to me that the advocates of qualia have entirely failed to address the criticism in the article. — Banno
they do demonstrably exist as something stable and predictable, if defined as "the way things look to us." — Olivier5
That it seems there are colored images is the what it’s like for humans to see. — Marchesk
Changing those theories to reinterpret the observation in a way that doesn’t falsify the theory you’re trying to test is still changing what theories you believe in response to observation. — Pfhorrest
Belief C hinges on the theories with which the observation is laden. If you reject C, then you have to change those beliefs that would otherwise lead you to conclude that C. — Pfhorrest
if we’re getting into the realm of possibly rejecting logical entailments then we’re free to be wildly inconsistent and not reject anything; all this is premised on caring about logical consistency — Pfhorrest
In any case, you have to reject some beliefs you already had: either throw out B (the obvious first choice), throw out some part of the background beliefs that lead you to believe C (probably a much taller order) — Pfhorrest
If you have to add additional beliefs to hang on to your belief system — your belief system cannot retain consistency with your experience without adding those other beliefs —then you have falsified the negations of those beliefs. — Pfhorrest
You asked for speculations in this post, remember? If you didn't want then, you shouldn't have asked for them.... — Olivier5
the fact that we have two interconnected brains (left, right) rather than one can be used to solve the "Cartesian theater" paradox. Instead of an infinite regress of theater viewers, you can conceive of just two viewers sharing notes and impressions. — Olivier5
But other (background) beliefs would compel us to interpret our observations (i.e. laden them with the theory contained in those beliefs) as demonstrating that self-contradictory belief to be so. Since a self-contradictory belief cannot be so — which we already knew, yes — we cannot within contradiction maintain those beliefs according to which our our observations demonstrate the contradictory belief to be true. — Pfhorrest
But that still leaves you with an observation that your background beliefs plus the theory under consideration together say should be impossible — logically impossibly, in conjunction with all those beliefs. All those beliefs and the thing they would have you say you observed cannot all be true at once...
...Either way, the observation of something your beliefs say should be logically impossible compels the revision of some beliefs or others to avoiding having to conclude that you observed something logically impossible. — Pfhorrest
Actual falsification that Popper et al supported is not the dogmatic falsificationism that Quine et al opposed. — Pfhorrest
We knew prior to the testing that we could not hold beliefs that would result in a contradiction. We did not know prior to the testing that our beliefs would result in a contradiction.
According to the beliefs we held before, what we seem to have observed should not have been logically possible, and therefore should not have been observed. Yet we seem to have observed it anyway. Therefore we must revise the theories ladening those observations, so that what we observed is not interpreted as being that logical impossibility. — Pfhorrest
some beliefs are about the relations between other beliefs. If C = "A implies B", then you can rule out the possibility of belief D = "A and ~B and C". You still don't know whether C, and if C, whether A or ~B, but you know for sure that ~D. — Pfhorrest
you think it is not possible to show any opinions to be incorrect, what exactly are you trying to do by arguing against mine? — Pfhorrest
you did the dance, that that should cause it to rain, but that it didn't rain. Yet you can't conclude all of those things at once. So you have to change something about that complete network of beliefs (the theories ladening your observations) to allow you to interpret your experiences in a way that doesn't imply that contradiction. — Pfhorrest
Because there is no consensus in any related field for an explanation of consciousness. — Marchesk
No it isn't. That's just an assertion that consciousness is somehow identical to certain functions. If we knew that to be true, then there would be no mystery as to what else is conscious. If it performed those functions, whether it was a bat nervous system, a simulation, a robot or a Chinese Brain, it would all be conscious, end of story. — Marchesk
Because it doesn't explain how it is that we're conscious. — Marchesk
Why do functions result in an experience at all? — Marchesk
an important thing is that some beliefs are about the relations between other beliefs. If C = "A implies B", then you can rule out the possibility of belief D = "A and ~B and C". You still don't know whether C, and if C, whether A or ~B, but you know for sure that ~D. — Pfhorrest
since you are putting an essentially undefined set of beliefs on the table, you have far too many options for disconfirmation. — Srap Tasmaner
In any of those cases, you're also going to have to rearrange the rest of your beliefs somehow or another to accommodate whichever of those you chose to revise. There's going to be many, many ways you could revise the rest of your beliefs to accommodate any of those. But somehow or another, you've got to change something, on pain of inconsistency, since you can't consistently believe that dancing makes it rain, you danced, and it didn't rain. — Pfhorrest
You can always save some atomic proposition by sacrificing others instead, but every time something seems to happen contrary to what your complete system of belief says should happen, you've got to make some change or another to your complete system of belief, — Pfhorrest
You mean to tell me you didn't notice that adding sugar changed your internal states in a desirable way until you learned about neural networks and predictive models? Did adding sugar have zero effect on your internal states before that? — Luke
I think he's saying the taste of tea isn't like a coin you drop in the slot on a machine and then it does something. The way we interface with and interact with our environment is way more complicated than that. — Srap Tasmaner
Can you read this? Can you see this writing? If so, does it appear to have any colour? — Luke
So you outright deny that we have conscious experiences. How does that work for you? You tell yourself it's only seems like there is a taste of tea when you sip? — Marchesk
Indeed, but yet we have an experience of tasting the tea. That's the hard problem. — Marchesk
If we had a science of consciousness, we would would be able to know what was conscious. — Marchesk
Dennett isn't a neuroscience, and his multiple drafts doesn't explain sensations. It just suggests how various activity in the brain becomes the center of attention. — Marchesk
It doesn't tell me how there is a color sensation. Instead, it explains how my brain performs certain functions related to discriminating color. — Marchesk
My entry:
... because of the mise en abyme allowed by our two brains talking to one another. — Olivier5
How the brain creates experiences of colors, smells, feels, etc. So far, there are only correlations, but not an actual explanation. Such and such neural activity does some sort of discrimination of incoming electrical impulses from eyes and is integrated with other brain activity to create a conscious awareness of a red cup. But it would have to show how that happens, and not just claim it does (which would be a correlation with observed brain activity). — Marchesk
It's kind of unfair to ask what the explanation would look like since nobody knows yet. — Marchesk
if it did, then the entry in the journal of philosophy could then go on to say how we could use this to understand bat sonar consciousness and create consciousness in robots. — Marchesk
But that objective understanding has no sensations of color, etc. — Marchesk
What internal states? How do you sense that it is desirable? How do you know that it will be again? — Luke
I don't want to call your entire mental state the taste of tea. I just want to know whether you can taste tea. It strikes me as abnormal that you can't. — Luke
